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Show r WVN 6B Sun m "I I Wednesday, November 5, 1986 Advocate, Price, Utah community news Teacher to Parent Helping your child succeed SBA rep by Betty Condie President, Utah Education Association As parents, we want our children to learn. We know the benefits of being able to read well, to write clearly, to solve problems, and to communicate effectively. Not only do these abilities allow us to earn a decent living, but they also help us to enjoy life and to appreciate its wonders and beauty. So, as many generations before us, we preach the benefits of a good education and try with deliberate effort to uphold, at least verbally, the of flitting value of studying the books and burning the parental behaviors that can help motivate our children to learn. None of these suggestions is in and of itself enough to spell the difference between a child who studies and one who does not study. It is the combination that is important. 1 Actively demonstrate your value for learning. 2 a Show interest in your childs learning. 3 Consistently and sincerely expect that your child can learn effectively. 4 Help your child to meet his or her basic needs of love, nutrition and rest. 5 Help your child to learn and midnight oil. But with our sermonettes, cajoling and in some instances, begging and threatening our children to study and learn, many of them seem to turn away and perceive us simply as nagging parents with little impact on their daily learning. We, in turn, often feel guilty and fatigued by these constant battles for our childrens benefit and resent our roles as wardens in the service of modern education. Yet there is much that we can do. What follows is a checklist of appropriate practice study habits. 6 Acknowledge and celebrate your childs effort in learning. 7 Get involved in your childs school. time it was believed that students did not learn because they were lazy or stupid. We now know that many things influence motivation for learning and that parents play significant roles in how motivated the student is to At one learn. GoasttoGoast Qrairsd Opening A representative of the Small Business Administration will be in Carbon County during the month of November. Persons wishing to contact him may do so in Price at the County Courthouse on Thursday, Nov. 6 from 9 to 10 : 30 a. m. Appointments may be scheduled through the Carbon County clerks office in Price. Stokes enrolled Air Force 2nd Lt. Gary N. Stokes, son of Andrew R. and Helen S. Stokes of 211 West 200 South, Wellsville, has entered the F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine, Bethesda, Md., to study for a doctor of medicine degree. The school provides ac- graduate-leve- l medical training to members of the Army, Navy, Air Force and credited, U.S. Public Health Service. His wife, Lisa, is the daughter of Edward and Kathryn Burnham of 695 East 200 South, Price. The lieutenant is graduate of Utah University, Logan. a 1986 State State Retirement Office Rep. The field representative for Utah State Retirement the Systems, Bonnie Sweat, will be in Price at the city offices on Thursday, Nov. 6 from 10:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. You may stop by at your convenience or make an ap pointment by calling All the functions of the main office can be handled by Sweat, and she will serve all active and retired members of the Utah state, public safety, firemens and judges retirement systems. King finished Marine Pfc. Todd M. King, a graduate of Green River High School of Green River, has completed the basic aviation structural mechanic course. course During the eight-wee- k at the Naval Air Technical Training Center, Millington, Tenn., King received instruction on the inspection, maintenance and repair of aircraft frames 1985 and exteriors (skeletons) (skins). In the classroom and practical applications periods, he studied blueprint reading, corrosion control and metal working. He joined the Marine Corps in February 1986. Variety show Local talent is still being sought for the community variety show to be held in the Price City Auditorium. The date for the event is Saturday, Nov. 29 and will start at 2 p.m. It will be part of the Holiday Hoopla 86, Magical, Musical Christmas. Performance times should be minute time kept within a frame. Local dance, musical and theatrical groups, as well as individuals are encouraged to take part in this yearly event. You may want to form a group 5-- 5 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SALE Now Eureka Upright Going On Vacuum Sale84a88 n r 0O $500 Zj Value for your old Beater bar brush. Toe switch and furniture motor (22M795i guard 4 Trade-I- n Dial-a-Na- p SEWING MACHINE (regardless of its condition) towards the purchase of a new Bernina 930. (this one time oiler exclusive of any previous sales prices or offers). Vacuum motlel I75 sewing machine, table or serger. on a OTT 1 free. Buy 5 spools metrosene thread-g- et 35 off on Bernette sergers. New Juki sergers (3 or 4 spool)-n- ow $389.00. 35 off on the new Bernette ironing press. 50 off on all Kwik Sew patterns in stock. 25 off on camouflage fabrics. All set tor upright vacuums Attachment sale prices good thru Nov. 25, '86 Regular 24 95 I9911fifi?l Attention Eureka Canister Vacuum All-Ste- el Sale6999 Features on 2 oft toe switr h H P (leak single stage motor furniture guairl edge r and cornel leaner and pi altar liment set ii.Mi 1 r Persons With Allergies and Asthma FROM . Disposable Dust Bags Saie2m39 Style H i..M Ifil Sale2 . 79 F 8 i i i;;i e. E.ureka disposable dust bags foi most upiighl and r anislei wu uum Style for the occasion. If you or your group is interested in performing as part to of the holiday fun and kick-othe Christmas season, please contact Neil Breinholt at ff 637-218- 8. This event is sponsored by the Carbon County Arts Council. diagnosis and treatment of allergic diseases. He sees patients at 94 North Fourth East Price, Utah 84501 For an appointment or further information call 0 in Price, Utah If you have questions regarding your need to see a specialist, please consult your own physician. 637-230- s ft m Michael Pessetto Richard Pessetto, and Mr. and Mrs.' Jessie Alexander, all of Price. library lines Carol Burnett story 'One More Time' eatiurs headlight Powerful A Sal e Carols first job was in a big movie an as usher theater, where she would lap up the performances of the stars of that time. Her favorite was she used to Jimmy Stewart dream that her father would someday be that kind of man. The tall, skinny girl in the wrong clothes had the kind of high school career you would on the outside of expect everything teenagers consider important. It was not until she One of Carol Burnetts daughters complained to her how hard it was to be the child of a celebrity, using this as an excuse for her drug habit. Burnett whipped back, Well, tough. Try growing up the daughter of two alcoholics. One More Time is Carol Burnetts letter to her three daughters, telling them how it was. And it was tough. Young Carol lived with her grandmother, since her mother was unable to take care of her, and her father was gone most of the time. Nanny, as Carol called her grandmother, was at once a rock and a frail reed, swaying in the breezes of hypochondria. Nanny would feel her pulse, roll her eyes heavenward and beg for her granddaughter to pray for her. Poor Carol would grab the family Bible and beseech God to spare her Nanny, time after time. They lived in a rickety apartment, really a room and a bath, which was a constant mess, since Nanny never threw away. Stacks of old newspapers and magazines cluttered the couch where Carol slept, as well as the one closet. Carol hung her few clothes on the shower rod. For a while, Carols mother, who lived down the hall, actually had a career of sorts, writing stories about movie stars for a fan magazine. This kept them going, while it lasted, but mama soon began drinking steadily and the little family resorted to living on welfare. When Nanny was feeling good, she and Carol would hit the boulevard and go windowshopping or their favorite pasttime, go to the movies. enrolled at UCLA, by saving every penny of her salary, that she began to get the recognition she craved. As a result of her performance in a college show, a wealthy man (whose name she still protects) staked her to $1,000 so she could go to New York and try her luck on the Broadway stage. Eventually she won the part of Princess Winnifred the Woebegone in the hit play Once Upon a Mattress. And the rest, as they say, is history. One More Time is only a piece of Carol Burnetts life the book ends with her first success but it is the piece that made her what she is today. Whether Burnett had help with the book or whether she wrote every word herself is, in my view, irrelevant. Her story is touching, all the more so because she never tries to be pathetic, simply relating the events of her young life as they happened. I hope her daughters learned I know I did. Three from it cheers for Carol Burnett and for One More Time. 10th Anniversary Sale All Organs ST. ANTHONY'S CATHOLIC 34.88 -- full-tim- By BECKY MOSS Library specialist cleaner. Eureka Upright Vacuum I Pessetto wins Michael Pessetto, 2, was the winner of the Little Star baby contest held at the K mart store in Price. He won $100 in the contest against over 100 other babies in the area. He also will have his photo entered in the national competition to be held in Syosset, N.Y. in January. Michael is the son of Mike and Darla Pessetto and the grandson of Ted an.' Agnes Peirce, anything BRENT R. BURDETT, M.D. BOARD CERTIFIED ALLERGIST INTERMOUNTAIN ALLERGY AND ASTHMA CLINIC Comes to Price, Utah on a regular basis for the I if 40 off way Dial mg heiqht adpistinent edge klpener and heater bar brush roll 4 (l i.d amp motor I9?8i fe k An 3ames, Concessions, All-Ste- el Canister Cleaner Vacuum lush i.K Just register while in our store Nothinq to buy1 Need not he present to win You must be 18 years or older to register Drawing will be held on the last day of our Grand Opening Sale1 Good lucldy Eureka Power Team Sale 169.99 Rnlomalic powerbead with motmied beater tiai biush Powerbead adpists to various ai pet heights F eatuies 2 0 peak H P motoi headlight amt a nmplete 8 pi tool set r r i, CM III "li p Booths, Miniature Golf, Food and Drinks, Prizes. HELPER CIVIC AUDITORIUM Thurs., Fri. & Sat., Nov. 6, 7 & 8 Turkey Dinner with all the trimmings Thursday Night, Progressive Servings, 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. re here to help you. We re TOTAL HARDWARE. 4 66 E. Main, Price 637-420- New Wurlitzer Model 500 SOUND GALORE You sound like the whole band with just two fingers Regular $2495 $1497 MUSIC Children's Matinee Friday, 1 p.m. Carnival Restaurant, Friday & Saturday Nights Come One Come All to the We EXAMPLE: St. Anthony's Catholic Carnival I, riRteJHah It E.Main, Price 637-01- ilLllllMlJIIIII AMERICAN CANCER yi SOCIETY |